
Gahan Wilson's Sunday Comics was his newspaper cartoon feature of the 1970s. Initially launched with unrelated cartoons, it soon grouped them thematically, as seen here with the books and libraries theme. The feature began March 3, 1974 and continued until 1977, syndicated by the Register & Tribune Syndicate. See Allan Holtz' Stripper's Guide for another Gahan Wilson Sunday Comics. Also check into The Gahan Wilson Virtual Museum.
Paul Rhymer's Vic And Sade was broadcast on NBC from 1932 to 1944. It was an influence on Kurt Vonnegut, who called it "the Muzak of my life".

Labels: bradbury, chenoweth, illinois, nbc, radio, rhymer, vic and sade

Labels: koons, paschke, sarah austin

Anita O'Day (1919-2006) was born Anita Belle Colton and took her professional surname from the Pig Latin word for "dough," which she need to support her drug habit. She said she could not read her autobiography, High Times Hard Times (1981), because it made her cry. Her appearance at the 1958 Newport Jazz Festival, captured in Bert Stern's Jazz on a Summer's Day (1959), was one of the peak moments of the 1950s. She was not only a soloist, she blended in as an instrument with the musicians onstage. In the Newport clip below she sings "Sweet Georgia Brown" and "Tea for Two." Does the musical quote in "Tea for Two" sound familiar? It's from the 1950s Marlboro commercials with the lyrics "You get a lot to like in a Marlboro: filter, flavor, flip-top box."Labels: bert stern, jazz, newport, o'day

Labels: chicken fat, crumb, dooley, elder, gilliam, mad, malle, ware


Considering that Frazetta drew for more than half a dozen different comic book publishers during the early 1950s, why so little for EC? He visited the EC offices in late 1951, but then also immediately began his 1952-53 syndicated Johnny Comet (later Ace McCoy) strip. When that vanished from newspapers he penciled a small batch of Flash Gordon dailies (February 1953) before beginning his lengthy tenure on Al Capp’s Li’l Abner.
But the various 1953-54 editorial crusades, accusing comic books of excessive violence, had already brought repercussions. The editor who deemed the Buck Rogers combat-with-clubs as too violent for Famous Funnies was Stephen A. Douglas (1907-67), a pioneer editor in the field. Between 1934 and 1956 Douglas edited Famous Funnies and several dozen other Eastern Color titles, while also scripting for such characters as Rainbow Boy, Man O’ Metal and Music Master. Had Douglas chosen to go with Frazetta’s drawing, it would have turned up on Famous Funnies #217. Other Famous Funnies Publications with Frazetta covers and stories were Buster Crabbe, Personal Love, Movie Love and Heroic Comics.Labels: buck rogers, capp, cochran, ec, frazetta, gaines, nick meglin
This is The Enigmatic Harbour (1985) by Bruce Pennington. Every time it rains, it rains Penningtons from Heaven. Click here for more. Control click heading at top for 55-minute WNYC: New Sounds: Philip Glass of music not commercially available. For more Glass, go to Orange Mountain.Labels: glass, orange, pennington, wnyc


Several films have “fake construct” plots similar to Philip K. Dick’s Time Out of Joint, and some may have been directly inspired by Dick’s novel.
Karen Summers (Greta Baldwin) unexpectedly turns up in the construct area, creating rips in the fake reality fabric, and another agent, Gregory Gallea (Monte Markham), also returns from Sino-Asia. Crowther turns his attentions to Gallea as a possible solution to the mystery weapon, but Gallea is destroyed by a mass of subconscious "brain energy." Although the Sinoese plan never works, it is revealed that the secret weapon is Hagen Arnold himself. He is a carrier of plague germs.



When Stuart Lowery, in chapter three of Time Out of Joint, arrives at Ragle's house to discuss Ragle's contest entries ("I know it's just an oversight on your part..."). the scene is remarkably similar to the manner in which quiz show contestants were prompted in advance. Some contestants were visited in their homes by producers and asked questions, but they were not always told that these same questions would later be asked when the show went on the air. On other cases, such as Xavier Cugat's appearances as an art expert on The $64,000 Question, questions would be drawn from a background file on the contestant and written to fit what was known about the contestant's scope of knowledge. Other contestants knew they were participating in fraud, and while one or two later revealed they came close to exposing the fraud on the air during live shows, no one ever did.
In chapter two, when Bill Black and Ragle examine the Gazette with its "line of photos of men and women" who were contest winners, the description matches the visual layouts of quiz show winners seen in 1956-57 magazines and newspapers. Although PKD never mentions the quiz shows in Time Out of Joint, one passage in chapter two almost heads in that direction: "Costs ran higher - he had figured one day - than the famous Old Gold contest of the mid-thirties or the perennial 'I use Oxydol soap because in 25 words or less' contests. But evidently it built circulation, in these times when the average man read comic books and watched..." Watched what? Well, back then, everyone was watching the quiz shows. So, after the ellipsis, PKD veered in another direction: "I'm getting like Bill Black, Ragle thought. Knocking TV. It's a national pastime in itself." He took a detour to avoid getting too close to his springboard source, the television quiz shows.
Labels: binder, cbs, kamen, nbc, philip k. dick, pkd, quiz, time, van doren, willis howard

is the editor of Against the Grain: Mad Artist Wallace Wood (2003), reviewed by Paul Gravett.